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| Dictionary: dust storm |
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| Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Dust storm |
A strong, turbulent wind carrying large clouds of dust. In a large storm, clouds of fine dust may be raised to heights well over 10,000 ft (3000 m) and carried for hundreds or thousands of miles (1 mi = 1.6 km).
Sandstorms differ by the larger mass, more rapid setting speeds of the particles involved, and the stronger transporting winds required. The sand cloud seldom rises above 3.3–6.6 ft (1–2 m) and is not carried far from the place where it was raised.
Dust storms cause enormous erosion of the soil, as in the dust bowl disasters of 1933–1937 in the Great Plains of the United States. Besides causing acute physical discomfort, they present a severe hazard to transportation by reducing the visibility to very low ranges. Conditions required are an ample supply of fine dust or loose soil, surface winds strong enough to stir up the dust, and sufficient atmospheric instability for marked vertical turbulence to occur.
Small dust particles increase scattering of light, mainly in short (blue) wavelengths. The Sun often appears a deep orange or red when seen through a dust cloud; however, optical effects are variable. Large particles are effective reflectors, and an observer in an aircraft above a dust storm may see a solid sheet with an apparent dust horizon.
| Geography Dictionary: dust storm |
Desert dust storms form when the wind picks up small, light particles such as silt. Many tonnes of light soil can be transported in storms some 500 km in diameter.
| WordNet: dust storm |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a windstorm that lifts up clouds of dust or sand
Synonyms: sandstorm, sirocco
| Wikipedia: Dust storm |
A dust storm or sandstorm is a meteorological phenomenon common in arid and semi-arid regions. Dust storms arise when a gust front blows loose sand and dust from a dry surface. Particles are transported by saltation and suspension, causing soil erosion from one place and deposition in another. The Sahara and drylands around the Arabian peninsula are the main source of airborne dust, with some contributions from Iran, Pakistan and India into the Arabian Sea, and China's storms deposit dust in the Pacific. It has been argued that recently, poor management of the Earth's drylands, such as neglecting the fallow system, are increasing dust storms from desert margins and changing both the local and global climate, and also impacting local economies.[1]
The term sandstorm is used most often in the context of desert sandstorms, especially in the Sahara, when, in addition to fine particles obscuring visibility, a considerable amount of larger sand particles are blown closer to the surface. The term dust storm is more likely to be used when finer particles are blown long distances, especially when the dust storm affects urban areas.
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As the force of wind passing over loosely held particles increases, particles of sand first start to vibrate, then to saltate ("leap"). As they repeatedly strike the ground, they loosen smaller particles of dust which then begin to travel in suspension. At wind speeds above that which causes the smallest to suspend, there will be a population of dust grains moving by a range of mechanisms: suspension, saltation and creep.[1]
A recent study finds that the initial saltation of sand particles induces a static electric field by friction. Saltating sand acquires a negative charge relative to the ground which in turn loosens more sand particles which then begin saltating. This process has been found to double the number of particles predicted by previous theory.[2]
Particles become loosely held mainly due to drought or arid conditions, and wind has varied causes. Gust fronts may be produced by the outflow of rain-cooled air from an intense thunderstorm, or they may represent a dry cold front, that is, a cold front that is moving into a dry air mass and is producing no precipitation. This is the type of dust storm which was common during the Dustbowl years in the U.S. Following the passage of a dry cold front, convective instability resulting from cooler air riding over heated ground can maintain the dust storm initiated at the front. In desert areas, dust and sand storms are most commonly caused by either thunderstorm outflows, or by strong pressure gradients which cause an increase in wind velocity over a wide area. The vertical extent of the dust or sand that is raised is largely determined by the stability of the atmosphere above the ground as well as by the weight of the particulates. In some cases, dust and sand may be confined to a relatively shallow layer by a low-lying temperature inversion. In other instances, dust (but not sand) may be lifted as high as 20,000 feet (6,100 m) high.
Drought and wind contribute to the emergence of dust storms, as do poor farming and grazing practices by exposing the dust and sand to the wind.
Dryland farming is also another cause of dust storms, since dryland farmers rely on rainfall to water their crops, they engage in practices to maintain moisture in the soil. Such practices include leaving a field fallow for a year after harvesting to allow the buildup of water to build in the soil and covering the field with dry earth in an attempt to seal in the underlying.[citation needed] These practices make dryland agriculture susceptible to dust storms. These methods are used by farmers in eastern Washington, an arid region.[3]
A sandstorm can move whole sand dunes. Dust storms can carry large amounts of dust, so much so that the leading edge of one can appear as a solid wall of dust as much as 1.6 km (1 mile) high. Dust and sand storms which come off the Sahara Desert are locally known as a simoom or simoon (sîmūm, sîmūn). The haboob (həbūb) is a sandstorm prevalent in the region of Sudan around Khartoum. When it happens you cant see even a thing but a wall of sand covering your view.
The Sahara desert is a key source of dust storms, particularly the Bodélé Depression[4] and an area covering the confluence of Mauritania, Mali, and Algeria.[5]
Saharan dust storms have increased approximately 10-fold during the half-century since the 1950s, causing topsoil loss in Niger, Chad, northern Nigeria, and Burkino Faso. In Mauritania there were just two dust storms a year in the early 1960s, but there are about 80 a year today, according to Andrew Goudie, a professor of geography at Oxford University.[6][7] Levels of Saharan dust coming off the east coast of Africa in June (2007) were five times those observed in June 2006, and were the highest observed since at least 1999, which may cool Atlantic waters enough to slightly reduce hurricane activity in late 2007.[8][9][10]
Dust storms have also been shown to increase the spread of disease across the globe. Virus spores in the ground are blown into the atmosphere by the storms with the minute particles then acting like urban smog or acid rain.[11]
Dust storms cause soil loss from the dry lands, and worse, they preferentially remove organic matter and the nutrient-rich lightest particles, thereby reducing agricultural productivity. Also the abrasive effect of the storm damages young crop plants. Other effects that may impact the economy are: reduced visibility affecting aircraft and road transportation; reduced sunlight reaching the surface; increased cloud formation increasing the heat blanket effect; high level dust sometimes obscures the sun over Florida; effects on human health of breathing dust.
Dust can also have beneficial effects where it deposits: Central and South American rain forests get most of their mineral nutrients from the Sahara; iron-poor ocean regions get iron; and dust in Hawaii increases plantain growth. In northern China as well as the mid-western U.S., ancient dust storm deposits known as loess are highly fertile soils, but they are also a significant source of contemporary dust storms when soil-securing vegetation is disturbed.
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See Mars Dust Storms.
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Dust storm moving over Cyprus from the rest of the Middle East. |
Dust storm in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, Australia. |
Dust storm in Sydney, Australia. |
Dust storm in Burkina Faso. |
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Dust storm in eastern Washington. |
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